The background for the creation of the …
Years: 962 - 962
The background for the creation of the newly palisaded town of Hedeby had been to protect the interests of trade.
Without peace and security merchants will stay away.
It is up to the king to enforce market peace and take steps to do whatever possible to keep buccaneers from raiding the ships bringing goods to the market.
In return for this protection he can collect dues from the merchants.
Ibrahim ibn Yaqub al-Tartushi, a traveler from Cordoba, provides one of the most colorful and often quoted descriptions of life in Hedeby, which may be a significant hub by Scandinavian standards, but lacks the wealth and comfort of al-Andalus.
Al-Tartushi is unimpressed: "Slesvig (Hedeby) is a very large town at the extreme end of the world ocean....
The inhabitants worship Sirius, except for a minority of Christians who have a church of their own there....
He who slaughters a sacrificial animal puts up poles at the door to his courtyard and impales the animal on them, be it a piece of cattle, a ram, billygoat or a pig so that his neighbors will be aware that he is making a sacrifice in honor of his god.
The town is poor in goods and riches.
People eat mainly fish which exist in abundance.
Babies are thrown into the sea for reasons of economy.
The right to divorce belongs to the women....
Artificial eye make-up is another peculiarity; when they wear it their beauty never disappears, indeed it is enhanced in both men and women.
Further: Never did I hear singing fouler than that of these people, it is a rumbling emanating from their throats, similar to that of a dog but even more bestial."
Locations
People
Groups
- Polytheism (“paganism”)
- Christianity, Chalcedonian
- Denmark, Kingdom of
- Córdoba, (Umayyad) Caliphate of
